When it comes to race baiting, nobody knows it better than Megyn Kelly. Thanks to her, we know that both Santa and Jesus are white. Thanks to her, we know that black men are very scary. And now, thanks to her piece about a video of an African-American toddler being coached to cuss by adults, we know about scary black babies. The video was posted by the Omaha Police Officers Association who titled it "Thug Culture" and who said, on their blog, that the video will "scare you." So who better to advance this fear of black babies than Megyn Kelly who, last night, let us know how she felt about this issue which, for Fox, is just another opportunity to smear the black community. I'm sure that Megyn's white supremacists fans will be pleased.

In keeping with her standard propaganda paradigm, Kelly immediately set the message immediately with right wing code words: "The controversy tonight after a police organization posts a disturbing video of what it describes as quote the continuation of the thug cycle." Naturally, she played the video of the young "thug" being coached to say "just about every vile thing that white people you can think of."

After introducing her guests, attorney Wendy Murphy and civil rights activist Michael Skolnik, Kelly said something that was not only stupid but an insult to every child who has been neglected, beaten, and/or raped by an adult: "It's so awful, it's the same as watching them pick him up and beat him physically." She defined, as controversies, the fact that no charges have been filed "against anyone"and that the police are "getting pushback" (awww, poor police) for posting the video which, they claim, they had an "obligation to share to educate the public about the terrible cycle of violence and thuggery..."

While Skolnik was appalled by what the child was being coached to say, he asserted that, in showing the child's face (Fox blurred it), the police association was being abusive. When he said that they have no right to "tell us how to raise our children," Kelly visibly looked off to the side. (One facial gesture worth a thousand words). The chyron reinforced the Fox message of parental malfeasance: "Adults Encourage Toddler to Say Vile Names, Curse Words in Video."

Murphy brayed about how the police didn't break any laws getting the video because it was already on the internet. She credited the police with being "responsible." Murphy said, as fact, that when "this kid grows up and become a gang banger [in Foxworld, that's every black man] and starts killing people and starts raping women [ah, the old black man as rapist narrative so beloved in the Jim Crow South] that's the language of a child, that's not what he's going to do but that's the message." She yelled that "somebody is going to say why didn't we intervene sooner...?"

Skolnik appropriately responded that her stereoltypical response about the future of this child is precisely why the video should not have been posted. Kelly "pressed" him about what happens if there is no intervention. Kelly asked him if he agrees that this is "abuse," she repeated "that is abuse." Skolnik said that there are proper procedures when abuse is suspected and posting a child's face on a website is not the way to address this. Murphy screamed "where did the police get the video." Megyn read the police group's comment in defense of their action. She explained that "they claim it's an education tool" to "show the public...I don't know what." (Ya got that right!)

While Skolnik tried to speak on behalf of the black community, Murphy kept yelling incoherently. Kelly said that "baby swearing is not good" and abusive. Her mouth contorted as she listed the swear words which, she claimed, wasn't "the child's first time." She wanted to know "where are the *charges against the care givers?" (Because it doesn't fall under the legal definition?)

So thanks to Megyn Kelly we have been educated about a pressing societal problem which obviously never occurs in white families. But seriously, understaffed child protective systems (evil government workers) are already handling huge caseloads involving real cases of abuse and neglect. This video is certainly an example of bad parenting which should be looked into; but a kid being coached to use "vile" language isn't what customarily meets the definition of child abuse unless there are other factors. Kelly should spend a day with a child protective social worker to see what real abuse is all about. But who needs reality when propaganda (scary and bad black culture) is being pushed.

Megyn Kelly doesn't know jack about child abuse and until she does she should really shut the f**k up! How's that for "vile" - and I'm a white product of a Catholic education!

(i) Placed in a situation that endangers his or her life or physical or mental health;

(ii) Cruelly confined or cruelly punished;

(iii) Deprived of necessary food, clothing, shelter, or care;

(iv) Left unattended in a motor vehicle if such minor child is six years of age or younger;

(v) Sexually abused; or

(vi) Sexually exploited by allowing, encouraging, or forcing such person to solicit for or engage in prostitution, debauchery, public indecency, or obscene or pornographic photography, films, or depictions

Seriously…how is the video I’m linking here not more horrifying than teaching a child to swear? Why doesn’t the “white community” do something about this obvious corruption in “their” culture? Police departments everywhere should re-post this video so that everybody can see how dangerous white people are. Where’s your outrage, Anne? WHERE IS IT?!

Yes, I’m outraged by what these parents are teaching their child. I’m outraged by what honey boo boo’s parents teach her as well. I’m also outraged by anyone who has ever purchased a child-sized klan robe. Now what?

I believe it’s an apt comparison. The way I see it, both sets of parents are encouraging awful behavior in their children and coaching them with obnoxious “adult-like” phrases that these children cannot possibly understand…and then exploiting this behavior for their own personal amusement and/or the amusement of the world (…also for fame and money in the case of honey boo boo’s parents). This is the nature of the “abuse” that I believe Ms. Kelly is referring to. And I have to agree, in a way, that being the child of bad parents is an unfair abuse. But hey…we live in a free country where any idiot has the right to procreate. So the question remains…why did the Omaha police feel the need to post this video? Especially since, as Antoinette has shown, teaching children to swear is not a phenomenon isolated to a single race?

Explain to me how a black toddler being taught swear words is the same thing as that. Or, how about we go one step further? I was an abuse victim- My dad and my exes. How about you explain how alike they are to me in a reply comment, after the intern shows you this?

Or, how about we go even one step further than that, and have you actually try explaining to a group of kids in foster care because their parents abuse them how this is just like what they went through?

Come on, Meggy- We know you’re one of the hosts who reads us. How about you try making me your sister?